Most recent avalanche victim identified as Vail resident
Vail Daily
Photo from Vail Ski Patrol
EAGLE — The Eagle County Coroner’s Office on Friday morning identified John Kuo, 41, of Vail, as the skier killed in Thursday’s avalanche in the East Vail Chutes.
Kuo, who went by Johnny, was a regular among locals who frequent the popular sidecountry area that is accessible from Vail Mountain’s eastern boundary.
According to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center’s preliminary report, Kuo exited Vail Mountain through a backcountry access gate and was skiing in an area known as Marvin’s when the slide occurred.
Companions and other riders in the area found him and performed resuscitation efforts but were unsuccessful, according to the report. The avalanche occurred on an east-facing slope below tree line. Rescuers estimate the avalanche was 700 feet wide and ran 1,000 vertical feet.
“This is a very unfortunate accident and our thoughts are with the victim’s friends and family,” Eagle County Sheriff James van Beek said in a news release announcing the death.
The avalanche was reported at about noon Thursday. Members of Vail Mountain Rescue and Vail Ski Patrol also responded to the scene to assist with recovery operations.
Siberia Bowl was closed at Vail as members of ski patrol worked to assist with the rescue operation.
Earlier in the week, three prominent Eagle County locals were killed in a massive slide in the San Juan mountains outside of Silverton while backcountry skiing.
Thursday’s death in East Vail marks the eighth avalanche fatality in the state this winter, already surpassing last season’s total of six.
The last time the state saw at least eight avalanche deaths in a season was the 2018-19 season, according to the Avalanche Information Center. Colorado’s deadliest avalanche season in recent memory was the 2012-13 season, which saw 11 avalanche deaths.
The East Vail Chutes, with their easy access from Vail Mountain’s eastern boundary, are a popular backcountry area, but that appeal has proven deadly over the years with numerous avalanches capturing skiers and snowboarders in the area.
Two skiers were buried in a slide in Jan. 2014 that killed one, while a skier and a snowboarder were buried and killed in seperate avalanches in the span of eight days in the area in Jan. 2008.
The Vail and Summit County zone, along with the Aspen and Gunnison zones, is under an avalanche warning following heavy snowfall.
“A foot or more of new snow and strong winds have combined to overload our fragile snowpack,” the warning states. “Large, wide, and deadly avalanches will be very easy to trigger. Natural avalanches can run long distances. Backcountry travelers should stay off of, and out from underneath, slopes steeper than 30 degrees.”
This story is from VailDaily.com.
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